Love Letters to the World Quotes

Rate this book
Clear rating
Love Letters to the World Love Letters to the World by Meia Geddes
64 ratings, 4.06 average rating, 19 reviews
Love Letters to the World Quotes Showing 1-26 of 26
“I try to live in the luminosity of things.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I think of the snow, falling, drifting upward. Of extending the ephemeral. Spaces follow spaces, burgeoning, and the air smells so sweet.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“If I could simply place the various parts of myself into the night sky to occasionally glance up and behold myself—maybe in the end I am only hoping to vicariously soak up some starlight.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“We are each of us a bird in a body. In the space between bodies lies a solitude formed by the vibration of differing thoughts.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I must not seek the sex of a sentence and work on embracing the sensual words surrounding, those that breathe with an ecstasy verging on their arrival.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I recommend the French beret, for it gives the impression of just the right soft toughness, a veritable wave of sophisticated brain matter. It is the kind of hat that inspires a person to grow into it, to become the person they never knew they could be. The space between the top of the head and the beginnings of hat is among the most intimate of areas: earlobe behinds, elbow insides, and anuses. One must pay heed to such spaces for they hold a potential not fully known (but generally agreed to be vast).”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I wonder if there has been a book written on toes—the bottom parts of a body are just as important as the top parts. Each chapter would focus on one of the ten toes and each would inspire singular, existential commentary: the potential of our toes as leaders, the solidity of our little instruments, the dangers of relating size and value. It would be called The Toe Manifesto and people would be interested in reading it because, after all, it is the toe that goes forward first and foremost, and the toe that helps to tell us if our bodies are hot or cold—in other words, the toe experiences far more than we give it credit for.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“To believe in moments makes life endless, no?”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“Art allows us to die over and over without actually dying. Only we must catch our breath.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
tags: art, death, life
“I let quiet shape what I say, then realize there is nothing that can be fully said—the reason for gestures and eyes and art. Always something waiting, wanting, expectant, yet also curiously not.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I will treat language with resigned delight, embrace it like unrequited love, offer words to you with a kind of secret shame, for I know that sometimes there is such a thing as too much language, and that language can hold a kind of sincerity that is tiresome and overwrought.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“A person can get lost trying to find a home in herself—but then you simply begin to go on as one must go on, and maybe you say a little something to yourself every once in a while just to practice being with words, meeting silence, meeting yourself again, and maybe you frequent empty rooms to familiarize yourself with the meaning of space as in a blank page, and yourself in it, and maybe you scribble like this will help you come home to yourself, but eventually you fit things together, and what made no sense finds its way into something plausible by virtue of its sheer existence.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“Being in the country is like being in a dream—one doesn't quite know who one is. There is an anonymity to it all—that strange human creature that is me, one among all.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“Every once in a while, and it happens only several times a year if I am lucky, I will feel astonishment that I exist, that I am sitting, standing, perceiving, and that others perceive me...It is probably a good thing I am not always so aware of my existence because otherwise I would walk about in a haze of wonder embracing things.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“Suffice to say, the dream writer had a way of phrasing things. She could depict the curve of a cucumber, the shape of a sunbeam, the endearing, velvety tilt of a peach, in just such a way that she earned her living selling dreams. One simply made a selection, read it in solitude, and let it percolate till sleep. People swore they fell directly into her renderings, and one even asked if the dream writer could write a dream of dreaming forever. The dream writer could not do this, but she hired dream apprentices to expand the reach of her dreams and she wrote dreams for herself in which she would sit at a desk, pen in hand, and write even more dreams. This nearly doubled her output.”
Meia Geddes, The Little Queen
“Cutting down a wall, the wall sawyer could feel the tension in a home ease and something windy rush in circles round her feet. It was addictive, each a sweet victory of art. The tumbling motion of a falling wall was like a volcanic eruption fading into a mountain of roses. The wall sawyer felt a loving animosity toward walls. “You must pay attention to your obsessions, where life and love intersect,” she told the little queen. ”
Meia Geddes, The Little Queen
“The little queen lived in a world where the sky swirled like the sea and nothing was itself for very long. Everything looked to be in brushstrokes.”
Meia Geddes, The Little Queen
“Is it not so presumptuous to write a word? To write a word is to give the word a space all of its own. You build a home for it and hope it can find itself at home among all the other words. Nestled in a new place.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I think I would like to write a book on love because one cannot speak of it too much. A Small Study on Love. A Survey of Love. An Investigation of Love. A Compendium on Love. An Omnibus on Love. The Forms of Love. An Opus on Love. Portraits of Love. To Love and to Be Loved. I see a young woman striding down the street and I wonder if she is in a hurry to love. I wonder if there will ever come a day when people can exchange hearts.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I would like to do more in appreciating the mindset of the child. Maybe it has something to do with taking ourselves very seriously and with great disregard, as well as having a healthy does of awe and doubt for all else.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“A slippage, what has not come to pass or what has passed, a bit of nothingness or a bit of everything if one considers all a slip of paper might hold.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I wonder how much space I take up, if a thought can take up secondary space.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“Maybe all you need to do is find the heartbeat in everything. And if writing is living, the discovery of the beat of a heart, then when you read me, you are living by my side.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
“I wonder if one can make one's life into a series of projects.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
tags: life
“It is good to be the pitter-patter of snow, no? To be an unexpected moment in time.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World
tags: snow
“I should think a poet president would be able to create a delectable confluence of various spaces. A poet is most political.”
Meia Geddes, Love Letters to the World